Results 31 to 40 of about 46,460 (250)
Euripides and the Origins of Democratic «Anarchia»
In this essay, I argue that the terms anarchia and anarchos had become associated with critiques of democracy before the final quarter of the fifth century BCE.
Jonah F. Radding
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Just Another Angry Woman: Adaptations of Female Rage through Euripides, Shakespeare, and Whedon [PDF]
Euripides’ portrayal of Medea, Shakespeare’s dramatization of Queen Margaret, and Joss Whedon and company’s creation of Willow Rosenberg all work to depict the silencing of female emotion.
Pistone, Melissa
doaj
The Liberation Struggle in Cyprus and the Greek-Cypriot Press: The Positions of the Leading Greek-Cypriot Press in 1957-1960. The Caseof “Eleftheria” Newspaper [PDF]
Little is known of the relationship between the anticolonial movement in Cyprus and the role of the Greek-Cypriot press The lack of prior work is a major obstacle and a challenge for communication, media and/or social movements researchers who have no ...
Euripides Antoniades
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Alceste com autoria partilhada: Eurípides e Saramago no Festea XXIII
A peça Alceste de Eurípides integrou a programação do FESTEA XXIII numa versão de Daniela Pereira e Carlos Jesus, com o intrigante título Que fazer com Alceste?
Carlos Liz
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Resumen Es generalmente aceptada la tesis de que Eurípides es el antecesor dramático directo de Menandro. Esta tesis supone además que Aristófanes, a pesar de ser el autor de comedia más antiguo que se conserva, tiene poca relación con la tradición ...
Álvaro Andrés Sáenz Alfonso
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Fear, Self-Pity, and War in Fifth-Century Athenian Tragedy: Ethos and Education in a Warrior Society [PDF]
In Greek culture, the natural connection between war and fear was acknowledged since Homer. However, during the Hellenic era (507-323 BC), war began to be represented on the stage in tragedies, in which the connection between war and fear included the ...
Maria Arpaia
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Cuerpo y corporeidad en la tragedia griega
Partiendo de una serie de consideraciones respecto de la centralidad del cuerpo y la corporeidad en la tragedia griega, el presente trabajo focaliza la tragedia Hipólito de Eurípides.
Lidia Gambon
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Minor epic: Notes toward a different “Anthropoetry”
Abstract Anthropologists have often turned to poetry as a means of accessing emotional registers of which conventional academic prose is unable to avail. In doing so, they have tacitly conflated poetry with lyric poetry, today probably the most widely practiced poetic genre, associated in particular with the expression of inner feelings and subjectival
Stuart McLean
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A Euripides quote in the prologue to The Knights (Eq. 14–20)
This article deals with the distribution of dialogue lines between two slaves in the prologue of Aristophanes’ The Knights. There is no agreement among editors which slave utters the quote from Euripides’ Hippolytus (Eur. Hipp.
G. S. Belikov
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The Literary Court: Reading Queen Charlotte
Abstract This article investigates the literary culture revolving around Queen Charlotte (1744–1818) between 1761 and 1818. The Queen's library, sold after her death in 1818, contained more than 4500 volumes, and the sales catalogue (1819) offers a fascinating glimpse into her collecting habits and reading interests. This article uses the catalogue, as
Mascha Hansen
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